Service layer

Match the symptom before spending money.

Most Texas septic problems narrow down to a short list: inspection, targeted repair, routine pumping, full replacement planning, new installation planning, or drainfield work because the ground has stopped taking water the way it should.

Texas state flag

Across Texas

Septic help in all 254 counties

County pages, regional overviews, and service guides work together so homeowners can start with the property location and narrow the next step faster.

  • 254 county pages
  • 6 public regions
  • 6 septic service guides

Compare the 6 paths

Core service

Septic inspection

Use a septic inspection to sort out system condition before a sale, before repairs stack up, or before a vague septic symptom gets misread.

Core service

Septic repair

Understand when a Texas septic problem still points to a repairable component instead of a full replacement conversation.

Core service

Septic pumping

Use pumping to protect tank capacity, but know when the real Texas septic problem sits farther downstream.

Core service

Septic replacement

Know when a Texas septic problem has moved past maintenance and repair and into full replacement planning shaped by soil, setbacks, drainage, and reserve space.

Core service

Septic installation

How septic installation in Texas gets shaped by soil, slope, rock, setbacks, drainage, and long-term use patterns.

Core service

Drainfield and leach field repair

Recognize when the field area is the real bottleneck and why Texas soil, slope, and water movement often decide the next move.

Useful next pages

Start with the symptom

Use the symptom guides when you know what the property is doing but not yet which service path fits.

Find your county page

Start with the county if the lot itself is likely to control the repair, pumping, or replacement decision.

Read the septic FAQ

Use the FAQ to sort common homeowner questions before you choose the service path.